StoryCorps Vivan Las Voces Brings Stories to Light
StoryCorps' 'Vivan Las Voces' Brings Stories to Light Javascript must be enabled to use this site. Please enable Javascript in your browser and try again. × Search search POPULAR SEARCHES SUGGESTED LINKS Join AARP for just $9 per year when you sign up for a 5-year term. Get instant access to members-only products and hundreds of discounts, a free second membership, and a subscription to AARP the Magazine. Leaving AARP.org Website You are now leaving AARP.org and going to a website that is not operated by AARP. A different privacy policy and terms of service will apply.
Prepare questions, but also use the StoryCorps as a resource. Create a StoryCorps account at .
Schedule the interview.
Log in to and start the conversation.
Save the conversation: Click on “Stop Recording” and on “Save Interview.” Give your story a descriptive title, summary, keywords and a photo to make it easier for you to find your interview in the future.
Tag the conversation with #VivanLasVoces so that your story is part of the project. In an interview for Vivan Las Voces, a partnership between AARP’s Office of Community Engagement and StoryCorps, Miranda-Diaz talks to her son Alexander Diaz about the role Puerto Rico has played in her life. She describes her love of the island, its impact on her career and her efforts to send help to Puerto Rico after the devastation of Hurricane Maria in 2017. Vivan Las Voces is a special initiative between AARP and — an organization that collects and preserves diverse stories in cooperation with the Library of Congress. “I wanted to tell my story through my eyes, through the lens of a girl who grew up there as a child, who learned to ride a bike there,” Miranda-Diaz says. That’s the beauty of StoryCorps and Vivan Las Voces: The stories are authentic, emotional, meaningful and powerful, says Alissa Pelc, managing director for corporate partnerships and strategic engagement at StoryCorps. Vivan Las Voces “helps us ensure that the conversations we’re recording and preserving and this national archive of stories reflects the true diversity of our country,” Pelc says. “It helps amplify and share voices that are not always heard in mainstream media.”
Vivan Las Voces Initiative Brings Community Stories to Light
Conversations between friends and family highlight uniquely Hispanic experiences
Gina Miranda-Diaz Storycorps Get instant access to members-only products and hundreds of discounts, a free second membership, and a subscription to AARP the Magazine. Miranda-Diaz’s Puerto Rican heritage even played a role in her career as a nurse. Because she became fluent on her summer trips, her father signed her up to be a hospital translator and she saw the importance of being able to communicate and advocate for Spanish speakers around their health. Miranda-Diaz, 59, is now a leader in the nursing field, especially when it comes to advocating for Hispanic patients and nurses.How to Record Your Story
Choose the person you want to interview.Prepare questions, but also use the StoryCorps as a resource. Create a StoryCorps account at .
Schedule the interview.
Log in to and start the conversation.
Save the conversation: Click on “Stop Recording” and on “Save Interview.” Give your story a descriptive title, summary, keywords and a photo to make it easier for you to find your interview in the future.
Tag the conversation with #VivanLasVoces so that your story is part of the project. In an interview for Vivan Las Voces, a partnership between AARP’s Office of Community Engagement and StoryCorps, Miranda-Diaz talks to her son Alexander Diaz about the role Puerto Rico has played in her life. She describes her love of the island, its impact on her career and her efforts to send help to Puerto Rico after the devastation of Hurricane Maria in 2017. Vivan Las Voces is a special initiative between AARP and — an organization that collects and preserves diverse stories in cooperation with the Library of Congress. “I wanted to tell my story through my eyes, through the lens of a girl who grew up there as a child, who learned to ride a bike there,” Miranda-Diaz says. That’s the beauty of StoryCorps and Vivan Las Voces: The stories are authentic, emotional, meaningful and powerful, says Alissa Pelc, managing director for corporate partnerships and strategic engagement at StoryCorps. Vivan Las Voces “helps us ensure that the conversations we’re recording and preserving and this national archive of stories reflects the true diversity of our country,” Pelc says. “It helps amplify and share voices that are not always heard in mainstream media.”